Coles Emma, Freeman Ruth
Dental Health Services Research Unit, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2016 Feb;44(1):53-63. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12190. Epub 2015 Jul 23.
To explore qualitatively, using a grounded theory approach, homeless people's awareness of their oral health needs and how they access dental services using a deconstruction-reconstruction formulation, and provide recommendations for service designers and dental professionals who work with people experiencing homelessness.
A qualitative study using grounded theory methodology was conducted. A purposive sample of homeless people was recruited from health facilities and organizations serving homeless populations in four Scottish cities and towns. Participants were interviewed about their oral health within the wider context of their experiences of homelessness. Initial research questions were open and focused on social processes such as oral health practices and interaction with dental services. Data collection and analysis were carried out simultaneously and iteratively, with emerging findings informing subsequent cycles. Data analysis was guided by Glaser and Strauss's grounded theory methodology and involved constant comparison, coding of transcripts and detailed memo-writing.
Thirty-four homeless people took part. Participant experiences were conceptualized as a journey into and through the stages of homelessness, towards 'reclaiming life'. Oral health experiences were mapped as a parallel 3-stage journey from the deconstruction of self-care, to the construction and maintenance of the neglected dentine, and finally to the reclamation of oral health resulting in a reconstructed functioning dentition.
This qualitative exploration using a deconstruction-reconstruction formulation has added to the understanding of homeless people's oral health awareness and dental treatment access while permitting an examination of the wider socioeconomic and psychosocial issues that disrupt their intentions to attend for treatment. These findings provide service designers and dental professionals with recommendations for the provision of responsive, acceptable and appropriate dental health services for those experiencing homelessness.
采用扎根理论方法进行定性研究,探讨无家可归者对自身口腔健康需求的认知,以及他们如何运用解构 - 重构模式获取牙科服务,并为服务设计者和与无家可归者打交道的牙科专业人员提供建议。
采用扎根理论方法进行定性研究。从苏格兰四个城镇为无家可归者提供服务的卫生设施和组织中,有目的地抽取了无家可归者样本。在更广泛的无家可归经历背景下,就他们的口腔健康对参与者进行了访谈。最初的研究问题是开放性的,重点关注口腔健康实践和与牙科服务互动等社会过程。数据收集和分析同时进行且反复迭代,新出现的发现为后续阶段提供信息。数据分析以格拉泽和施特劳斯的扎根理论方法为指导,包括持续比较、对访谈记录进行编码以及详细撰写备忘录。
34名无家可归者参与了研究。参与者的经历被概念化为一段进入并贯穿无家可归各个阶段、迈向“重拾生活”的旅程。口腔健康经历被描绘为一个平行的三阶段旅程,从自我护理的解构,到被忽视牙本质的构建和维护,最后到口腔健康的恢复,从而形成重建的功能性牙列。
这种采用解构 - 重构模式的定性探索增进了对无家可归者口腔健康意识和牙科治疗获取情况的理解,同时允许审视那些干扰他们接受治疗意愿的更广泛的社会经济和心理社会问题。这些发现为服务设计者和牙科专业人员提供了建议,以便为无家可归者提供响应迅速、可接受且合适的牙科保健服务。